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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
121

Vegetation mapping and estimation of the extent of near-surface permafrost in Mackenzie Delta, Northwest Territories /

Nguyen, Thai-Nguyen, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.SC.) - Carleton University, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 136-146). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
122

Floristic surveys of Saguaro National Park protected natural areas

Halvorson, William L. Gebow, Brooke S. January 1900 (has links)
"October 2000." / Includes bibliographical references (p. 46).
123

Forest Harvesting Disturbance and Site Preparation Effects on Soil Processes and Vegetation in a Young Pine Plantation

Lister, Tonya Whitcomb 10 April 1999 (has links)
The favorable growth of young loblolly pines (Pinus taeda L.) in response to controlling non-crop vegetation is well documented. However, the beneficial effects of non-crop vegetation on soil quality, nutrient cycling, and biodiversity have not been thoroughly explored. A study was conducted to determine the effects of harvesting-induced soil disturbance, bedding and chemical vegetation control on soil processes and productivity, and to characterize the effects of silvicultural treatments on non-crop vegetation dynamics. Study plots were established on a wet pine flat on South Carolina's lower Coastal Plain. Treatments included a range of 5 disturbance classes (undisturbed, compression tracked, shallowly rutted, deeply rutted and churned), two site preparation treatments (flat planted and bedded) and a gradient of vegetation control (no vegetation control, operational-level weed control and complete weed control). Soil disturbances had relatively small effects on soil quality. Soil compaction reduced soil aeration, but this condition was fully ameliorated by bedding. Churning did not degrade the soil physical environment in any measureable way, largely because slash and litter were incorporated into the surface soil. Bedding and churning increase soil biological activity, which increased nitrogen mineralization in excess of pine demand. When non-crop vegetation was chemically controlled, mineralization rates increased due to increases in surface soil temperatures. With less vegetation on the site, the amount of nitrogen sequestered was less, furthering the potential for nitrogen loss by leaching or denitrification. Soil quality improved somewhat with increasing levels of non-crop vegetation biomass; however, these beneficial effects were marginal during two years of operational vegetation control. The majority of dominant species on undisturbed treatment areas were woody, and soil disturbance, including bedding, reduced the proportions of these species. Silvicultural treatments had little effect on the prevalence of hydrophytic species on these wetland study sites. From a forest management point of view, for this site type, it appears that much is gained by reducing competition from non-crop vegetation; the benefits of controlling the density of non-crop vegetation for encouraging early pine growth are clear. While non-crop vegetation slightly improved system function by sequestering available nitrogen, increasing diversity and increasing soil quality, these improvements do not appear to be critical to forest function on these inherently high-quality sites. / Master of Science
124

Submerged flexible vegetation impact on open channel flow velocity distribution: An analytical modelling study on drag and friction

Pu, Jaan H., Hussain, Awesar, Guo, Yakun, Vardakastanis, Nikolaos, Hanmaiahgari, P.R., Lam, Dennis 06 June 2019 (has links)
Yes / In this paper, an analytical model that represents the streamwise velocity distribution for open channel flow with submerged flexible vegetation is studied. In the present vegetated flow modelling, the whole flow field has been separated into two layers vertically: a vegetated layer and a non-vegetated free-water layer. Within the vegetated layer, an analysis of the mechanisms affecting water flow through flexible vegetation has been conducted. In the non-vegetated layer, a modified log-law equation that represents the velocity profile varying with vegetation height has been investigated. Based on the studied analytical model, a sensitivity analysis has been conducted to assess the influences of the drag and friction coefficients on the flow velocity. The investigated ranges of drag and friction coefficients have also been compared to published values. The findings suggest that the drag and friction coefficient values are non-constant at different depths and vegetation densities, unlike the constant values commonly suggested in literature. This phenomenon is particularly clear for flows with flexible vegetation, which is characterised by large deflection.
125

Drag coefficient modelling study for flexible vegetation in open channel flow

Hussain, Awesar, Pu, Jaan H., Hanmaiahgari, P.R. 10 November 2018 (has links)
No / Vegetation remains to be an important factor that can hinder the river flow. It needs innovative management scheme, in order to adapt these changes and ensure sustainability of their multiple usages. Vegetation plays an important role in floods and droughts adaptation within river system to alleviate any flood that may propagates from river to its surrounding. Vegetation within river can also retard its flow to cause building-up of deposition, and further adding to uncertainty of water use under extreme droughts. Due to these, it is important to study and understand vegetation drag behaviour toward flow in order to prevent flood risk and water security with hydrological drought in the basin and any other negative impact caused by it. In this study, an analytical approach for river flooding has been studied by improved representation of drag coefficient CD in flow velocity distribution modelling. The analysis of flow parameters, i.e. Reynolds number, on the drag coefficient CD has been conducted. The presented model has been used and analysed in open channel flows with flexible vegetation. In modelling, the flexible vegetated channel layers were divided into vegetation, top of vegetation and water layer zones in the model. The balance of forces for each layer has been established by validation using different reported measured data. The modelling results showed reasonably corresponding prediction of velocity profile in flows with flexible vegetation.
126

Experimental Study and Numerical Simulation of Vegetated Alluvial Channels

Abdalrazaak Al-Asadi, Khalid A. January 2016 (has links)
Vegetation in rivers increases flow resistance and bank stability, reduces bed resistance and flow conveyance, improves water quality, promotes habitat diversity, and alters both mean and turbulent flow. By reducing bed resistance and altering turbulent characteristics, vegetation can change the distribution of deposition and erosion processes. To understand all above mentioned vegetation effects, more research is needed. The goal of this dissertation was to determine the impacts of vegetation on bed resistance and sediment transport and identify a best approach for quantifying vegetation induced friction resistance. To achieve this, both experimental study and numerical simulation were performed. A series of laboratory experiments were conducted in an open channel flume to investigate the impacts of vegetation density on bed resistance and bed load transport for emergent vegetation condition. The bed resistance in a mobile bed channel is equal to the summation of grain and bed form resistances. An attempt has been made to make a separation between grain and bed form resistances, which is challenging and has never been reported in literature. An alternative approach is used to calculate the grain resistance. A new iterative method was derived to calculate the bed form resistance. Empirical relations were formulated to calculate the bed form resistance and bed load transport rate using a newly defined flow parameter that incorporates the vegetation concentration. The bed elevations and bed form height were measured by the Microsoft Kinect 3D Camera. It was found that the height of bed form depends on the vegetation concentration, which determines whether ripple/dune or scour holes are dominant on the bed surface. For sparsely vegetated flows, the bed form height and resistance are decrease rapidly as the vegetation concentration was increased, and they decreased gradually when the vegetation concentration was high. To quantify the vegetation induced friction resistance, a 3D numerical simulation was conducted using the Delft3D-FLOW open source program. The study area is Davis Pond freshwater marsh area near New Orleans, Louisiana. The dominant vegetation type for the study area is Panicum hemitomon. The study area was divided into several sub-areas depending on the existence of channels, overbanks, and vegetation height. Several approaches were used to approximate the vegetation roughness; a constant Manning's n coefficient, a time-varying n or Chezy's C coefficient, and the modified momentum and k-ɛ equations for each subarea. To quantify the time varying roughness coefficients, four equations for calculating n values were incorporated in the Delft3D-FLOW program in addition to two options offered by this program to calculate C values. It is concluded that the use of the time varying roughness coefficient gives better results than other approaches. Among the selected equations to calculate the time varying vegetation roughness, the equations that account for the effect of the degree of submergence and the vegetation frontal area per unit volume, symbolized as a, gave the closet matches with the observations. The sensitivity of modeling results to the selection of vertical grid (σ–and Z-grids), a value, and grid size were analyzed. It is found that using the σ-grid yielded more accurate results with less CPU times and the best range of a value for the Panicum hemitomon vegetation type is from 8.160 to 11.220 m⁻¹. Also it was observed that the adoption of a coarse mesh gives reasonable simulation results with less CPU time compared with a fine mesh. A non-linear relation between the vegetation resistance, in terms of n value, and degree of submergence was observed.
127

An experimental study of the factors limiting plant growth in Upper Teesdale

Kookorinis, Evangelos January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
128

The natural vegetation of Trinidad and Tobago

Beard, John Stewart January 1945 (has links)
No description available.
129

Vegetation parameter retrieval from hyperspectral, multiple view angle PROBA/CHRIS data

Kamalesh, Vidhya Lakshmi January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
130

The nature and significance of microtopographic effects on vegetation succession on selected glacier forelands, Jotunheimen and Jostedalen, Norway

Foskett, Jacqueline Isabel Jeanne January 1998 (has links)
No description available.

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